PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Poorest miss out on benefits, experience more material hardship, since 1996 welfare reform

2012-09-13
(Press-News.org) Although the federal government's 1996 reform of welfare brought some improvements for the nation's poor, it also may have made extremely poor Americans worse off, new research shows.

The reforms radically changed cash assistance—what most Americans think of as 'welfare'— by imposing lifetime limits on the receipt of aid and requiring recipients to work. About the same time, major social policy reforms during the 1990s raised the benefits of work for low-income families.

In the wake of these changes, millions of previous welfare recipients, largely single mothers, entered the workforce. At the same time, welfare has become more difficult to obtain for families at the very bottom, who often have multiple barriers to work. As a result, in the new welfare system, the working poor may be doing better while the deeply poor are doing worse.

Marci Ybarra, assistant professor at the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago, and lead author H. Luke Shaefer, assistant professor at the University of Michigan School of Social Work, explore the changes in a new paper, "The Welfare Reforms of the 1990s and the Stratification of Material Well-being among Low-income Households with Children," published in September in Children and Youth Services Review.

They compare trends in the material well-being of deeply poor families—those with incomes below 50 percent of poverty ($11,500 for a family of four in 2012) — with those of near poor families—those with incomes between $23,051 and about $34,500. They find that while aid has increased to near poor families, the deeply poor have seen a significant decline in aid.

"This is the first study to use nationally representative survey data to compare the material hardships of deeply poor households with children to other low-income groups of lower-income households with children, before and after the 1990s welfare reforms," Ybarra writes. The scholars studied data from the Census Bureau's Survey of Income and Program Participation from 1992 to 2005 to determine how the deeply poor fared compared to the near poor. They found:

While the amount of public aid received by deeply poor households fell dramatically, it increased substantially for near poor families, particularly through expansions of the Earned Income Tax Credit, a benefit that reduces income taxes for certain people with low or moderate wages.

Among deeply poor households with children, 48 percent reported in 2005 they did not have enough money to cover most of their essential household expenses, compared with 45 percent in 1992 and 37 percent in 1995.

In contrast, among near poor households with children, 30 percent reported in 2005 that they had difficulty meeting their household expenses, down from 37.9 percent in 1992.

Even among deeply poor households, 41 percent of household heads were working in 2005. But this is well below the proportion for near poor households, in which 88 percent of household heads work. This may be because household heads among the deeply poor were more likely to report a work-limiting disability.

Among deeply poor households with children, a rising proportion are surviving on virtually no income—$2 a day or less in any given month, according to a companion study released by Shaefer and Kathryn Edin, professor of public policy and management at Harvard University. In fact they found that 1.46 million households with children fall under this metric, used to measure poverty in developing nations.

Among deeply poor households with some income, it largely comes from work, gifts from families and friends, and what remains of cash assistance. Ybarra and Shaefer report that while only 15 percent of the deeply poor receive cash assistance, nearly 60 percent of the deeply poor get food stamps and 30 percent get a housing subsidy.

Ybarra argues that the results of this study "should prompt policymakers to be more aware of the income diversity among the poor and the ways in which policy may increase stratification among the poor. Social workers as well need to be aware of the variety of forms poverty takes so that supports they offer can be consistent with the needs of the clients they serve." The authors warn that "material hardship has likely increased for low-income families, particularly the poorest, in light of the Great Recession."

###The research, conducted at the University of Michigan while Ybarra was a postdoctoral fellow, was supported by the Department of Health and Human Services, and the National Science Foundation.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mutation breaks HIV's resistance to drugs

2012-09-13
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can contain dozens of different mutations, called polymorphisms. In a recent study an international team of researchers, including MU scientists, found that one of those mutations, called 172K, made certain forms of the virus more susceptible to treatment. Soon, doctors will be able to use this knowledge to improve the drug regiment they prescribe to HIV-infected individuals. "The 172K polymorphism makes certain forms of HIV less resistant to drugs," said Stefan Sarafianos, corresponding author of the study and researcher at MU's ...

UMD study shows exercise may protect against future emotional stress

2012-09-13
Moderate exercise may help people cope with anxiety and stress for an extended period of time post-workout, according to a study by kinesiology researchers in the University of Maryland School of Public Health published in the journal Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. "While it is well-known that exercise improves mood, among other benefits, not as much is known about the potency of exercise's impact on emotional state and whether these positive effects endure when we're faced with everyday stressors once we leave the gym," explains J. Carson Smith, assistant ...

Snakes minus birds equals more spiders for Guam

Snakes minus birds equals more spiders for Guam
2012-09-13
HOUSTON -- (Sept. 13, 2012) -- In one of the first studies to examine how the loss of forest birds is effecting Guam's island ecosystem, biologists from Rice University, the University of Washington and the University of Guam found that the Pacific island's jungles have as many as 40 times more spiders than are found on nearby islands like Saipan. "You can't walk through the jungles on Guam without a stick in your hand to knock down the spiderwebs," said Haldre Rogers, a Huxley Fellow in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Rice and the lead author of a new study this ...

Under-twisted DNA origami delivers cancer drugs to tumors

2012-09-13
Scientists at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden describe in a new study how so-called DNA origami can enhance the effect of certain cytostatics used in the treatment of cancer. With the aid of modern nanotechnology, scientists can target drugs direct to the tumour while leaving surrounding healthy tissue untouched. The drug doxorubicin has long been used as a cytostatic (toxin) for cancer treatment but can cause serious adverse reactions such as myocardial disease and severe nausea. Because of this, scientists have been trying to find a means of delivering the drug to the ...

Daily disinfection of isolation rooms reduces contamination of healthcare workers' hands

2012-09-13
CHICAGO (September 13, 2012) – New research demonstrates that daily cleaning of high-touch surfaces in isolation rooms of patients with Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) significantly reduces the rate of the pathogens on the hands of healthcare personnel. The findings underscore the importance of environmental cleaning for reducing the spread of difficult to treat infections. The study is published in the October issue of Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, the journal of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology ...

Cloned receptor paves way for new breast and prostate cancer treatment

2012-09-13
Researchers at Uppsala University have cloned a T-cell receptor that binds to an antigen associated with prostate cancer and breast cancer. T cells that have been genetically equipped with this T-cell receptor have the ability to specifically kill prostate and breast cancer cells. The study is being published this week in PNAS. Genetically modified T cells (white blood corpuscles) have recently been shown to be extremely effective in treating certain forms of advanced cancer. T cells from the patient's own blood cells are isolated and equipped by genetic means with a ...

Boiling water without bubbles

2012-09-13
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Every cook knows that boiling water bubbles, right? New research from Northwestern University turns that notion on its head. "We manipulated what has been known for a long, long time by using the right kind of texture and chemistry to prevent bubbling during boiling," said Neelesh A. Patankar, professor of mechanical engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science and co-author of the study. This discovery could help reduce damage to surfaces, prevent bubbling explosions and may someday be used to enhance heat transfer ...

Canada Pharmacy Directory Offers Free Feature Listing for a Limited Time

2012-09-13
Canada Pharmacy Directory is announcing for a limited time a free 6-month feature listing in their online search directory. The feature listings are available for an annual rate of $2499 per year. With a purchase of a 1 year plan, the feature listing is extended at no charge to 18 months. "Our feature listing is the most sought after plan because it provides front page exposure that generates the most visibility for our online pharmacy operators, " says Andy Chandler of CanadaPharmacyDirectory.com. "With any search directory, the higher position you are ...

Sinusitis linked to microbial diversity

Sinusitis linked to microbial diversity
2012-09-13
A common bacteria ever-present on the human skin and previously considered harmless, may, in fact, be the culprit behind chronic sinusitis, a painful, recurring swelling of the sinuses that strikes more than one in ten Americans each year, according to a study by scientists at the University of California, San Francisco. The team reports this week in the journal Science Translational Medicine that sinusitis may be linked to the loss of normal microbial diversity within the sinuses following an infection and the subsequent colonization of the sinuses by the culprit bacterium, ...

Novel non-antibiotic agents against MRSA and common strep infections

2012-09-13
Menachem Shoham, PhD, associate professor of biochemistry at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, has discovered novel antivirulence drugs that, without killing the bacteria, render Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) and Streptococcus pyogenes, commonly referred to as strep, harmless by preventing the production of toxins that cause disease. The promising discovery was presented this week at the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy in San Francisco. MRSA infections are a growing public health concern, causing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

From leadership to influencers: New ASU study shows why we choose to follow others

‘Celtic curse’ genetic disease hotspots revealed in UK and Ireland

Study reveals two huge hot blobs of rock influence Earth’s magnetic field

RCT demonstrates effectiveness of mylovia, a digital therapy for female sexual dysfunction

Wistar scientists demonstrate first-ever single-shot HIV vaccine neutralization success

Medical AI models need more context to prepare for the clinic

Psilocybin shows context-dependent effects on social behavior and inflammation in female mice modeling anorexia

Mental health crisis: Global surveys expose who falls through the cracks and how to catch them

New boron compounds pave the way for easier drug development

Are cats ‘vegan’ meat eaters? Study finds why isotopic fingerprint of cat fur could trick us into thinking that way

Unexpected partial recovery of natural vision observed after intracortical microstimulation in a blind patient

From sea to soil: Molecular changes suggest how algae evolved into plants

Landmark study to explore whether noise levels in nurseries affect babies’ language development

Everyday diabetes medicine could treat common cause of blindness

Ultra-thin metasurface chip turns invisible infrared light into steerable visible beams

Cluster radioactivity in extreme laser fields: A theoretical exploration

Study finds banning energy disconnections shouldn’t destabilise markets

Researchers identify novel RNA linked to cancer patient survival

Poverty intervention program in Bangladesh may reinforce gender gaps, study shows

Novel approach to a key biofuel production step captures an elusive energy source

‘Ghost’ providers hinder access to health care for Medicaid patients

Study suggests far fewer cervical cancer screenings are needed for HPV‑vaccinated women

NUS CDE researchers develop new AI approach that keeps long-term climate simulations stable and accurate

UM School of Medicine launches clinical trial of investigative nasal spray medicine to prevent illnesses from respiratory viruses

Research spotlight: Use of glucose-lowering SGLT2i drugs may help patients with gout and diabetes take fewer medications

Genetic system makes worker cells more resilient producers of nanostructures for advanced sensing, therapeutics

New AI model can assist with early warning for coral bleaching risk

Highly selective asymmetric 1,6-addition of aliphatic Grignard reagents to α,β,γ,δ-unsaturated carbonyl compounds

Black and Latino teens show strong digital literacy

Aging brains pile up damaged proteins

[Press-News.org] Poorest miss out on benefits, experience more material hardship, since 1996 welfare reform